
This is your mascot. They're laughing at you.
When I was 11 years old, I went through the DARE program. The police officer that taught us was a morbidly obese coalburner with a mullato child. Several years later, her eggplant son was arrested and expelled during school for purchasing drugs in the library. DARE was a joke, and will likely still be a joke once these changes are enacted. Children will keep picking up drugs as long as Jew Hollywood and Jew Media make light of increasing marijuana use and the Jew Music Industry continues to glorify drug culture.
From Paul Boxer at The Conversation:
Recently, Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced that he would like to reinvigorate D.A.R.E., a move that was met with considerable skepticism in the media.
Oy vey, don’t you know anti-drug programs are racist and hurt brown people but are also completely ineffective?
By now, it’s fairly well-known that the first version of D.A.R.E. was a failure: Studies of the program found that not only did D.A.R.E. fail to prevent students from using drugs, in some cases it actually increased the likelihood that students would use drugs.
Part of the difficulty with any substance use prevention program is that experimentation and risk-taking are part of youth development, and providing students with more elaborate information about the effects of different substances could pique their interest even more, particularly if the information is not presented appropriately. Regardless of how the first D.A.R.E. program fell short, its failure was acknowledged. According to D.A.R.E. publicity materials, the program is still in place in approximately 75 percent of American school districts, but D.A.R.E. has fallen from grace and is no longer as central to U.S. anti-drug policy as it once was.
Essentially, we see most common shortfall of American Education; the people behind the lesson plans and the people who teach are overwhelmingly fucking incompetent.
You might be surprised to learn this, but the contemporary version of D.A.R.E. isn’t really D.A.R.E. at all – it’s a D.A.R.E.-branded adaptation of a highly successful, evidence-based substance use prevention program that rests on a body of scientific research documenting its effectiveness.
The program is called “Keepin’ It REAL” and was developed originally by prevention scientists at Penn State University. On its face, KIR looks like another “just say no” program: It relies on the acronym REAL, applied as “refuse,” “explain,” “avoid” and “leave.”
But while the theme of KIR rests on refusal and avoidance (i.e., just saying no), the curriculum addresses many of the issues that contribute to drug use in the first place, by teaching and working with youth on communication skills, self-regulation, cognitive problem-solving and emotion knowledge.
Honestly, it does not matter how much science backs the DARE program as it was made to fail anyway. In my area the program was taught to 11 and 12 year olds. I didn’t know what crystal meth or ecstasy was until I went through the program and my guess is that it was the same for many of the others. When white children are raised from birth with niggers on the radio and TV glorifying drug use and denigrating lawful authorities, how do you possibly expect them to respond positively to a police officer telling them not to do drugs. If I were Jeff Sessions, I would consider the removal of all Jews as a means of cutting down on the drug problem in North America. I get a feeling that Jews may have something to do with it…